Bar-class boom defence vessel
The Bar class were a class of boom defence vessels of the Royal Navy, Royal Australian Navy and South African Navy during World War II.
![]() HMS Barglow  | |
| Class overview | |
|---|---|
| Operators | |
| Completed | 74 | 
| Preserved | 1 | 
| General characteristics [1] | |
| Type | Boom defence vessel | 
| Displacement | 533 long tons (542 t) | 
| Length | 41.14 m (135 ft 0 in) | 
| Beam | 7.77 m (25 ft 6 in) | 
| Draught | 3.81 m (12 ft 6 in) | 
| Speed | 9.5 knots (17.6 km/h; 10.9 mph) | 
| Complement | 30 | 
| Armament | 1 × 12-pounder gun | 
Ships
    
    Royal Navy
    
- HMS Barbain (Z01)
 - HMS Barbarian (Z18)
 - HMS Barbastel (Z276)
 - HMS Barberry (Z257)
 - HMS Barbette (1937) (Sold to the Turkish Navy 3 March 1941)
 - HMS Barbette (Z242) (Broken up October 1965 in Belgium)
 - HMS Barbican (Z43)
 - HMS Barbour (Z169)
 - HMS Barbourne (Z170)
 - HMS Barbrake (Z173) (transferred to the South African Naval Forces in 1943)
 - HMS Barbridge (Z222)
 - HMS Barbrook (Z03)
 - HMS Barcarole (Z287)
 - HMS Barcastle (Z09)
 - HMS Barcliff (Z70)
 - HMS Barclose (Z174)
 - HMS Barcock (Z177)
 - HMS Barcombe (Z16)
 - HMS Barcote (Z52)
 - HMS Barcroft (Z22)
 - HMS Bardell (Z195)
 - HMS Bardolf (Z171)
 - HMS Barfair (Z31)
 - HMS Barfield (Z42)
 

HMS Barfoam at Singapore, early in World War II
- HMS Barfoam (Z182)
 - HMS Barfoil (Z194)
 - HMS Barfoot (Z202)
 - HMS Barford (Z209)
 - HMS Barfoss (Z200)
 - HMS Barfount (Z190)
 - HMS Barglow (Z205)
 - HMS Barhill (Z225)
 - HMS Barholm (Z211)
 - HMS Barilla (Z17)
 - HMS Baritone (Z271)
 - HMS Barking (Z181)
 - HMS Barkis (Z277)
 - HMS Barlake (Z39)
 - HMS Barlane (Z48)
 - HMS Barleycorn (Z256)
 - HMS Barlight (Z57) (scuttled 19 December 1941, salvaged by IJN as Ma.101, after war to China[2])
 - HMS Barlow (Z60)
 - HMS Barmill (Z67)
 - HMS Barmond (Z232)
 - HMS Barmouth (Z77)
 - HMS Barnaby (Z237)
 - HMS Barnard (Z241)
 - HMS Barndale (Z92)
 - HMS Barneath (Z245)
 - HMS Barnehurst (Z84)
 - HMS Baron (Z262)
 - HMS Baronia (Z87) (built by Charles Hill & Sons)
 - HMS Barrage (Z54)
 - HMS Barranca (Z65)
 - HMS Barrhead (Z40)
 - HMS Barricade (Z83)
 - HMS Barrier (Z98)
 - HMS Barrington (Z59)
 - HMS Barrymore (Z73)
 - HMS Barsing (Z75)
 - HMS Barsound (Z89)
 - HMS Barspear (Z224)
 - HMS Barstoke (Z32)
 - HMS Barthorpe (Z95)
 - HMS Bartizan (Z261)
 - HMS Barwell (Z46)
 - HMS Barwind (Z58)
 - HMS Barcross (Z185), transferred to the South African Naval Forces in 1943.
 - HMS Barflake (Z184) (lost 22 November 1943)
 - HMS Barnstone (Z37)
 - HMS Barova (Z94) (built by Charles Hill & Sons)
 
Royal Australian Navy
    

HMAS Kangaroo in 1947
| Name | Ship builder | Launched | Fate | 
|---|---|---|---|
| HMAS Koala | Cockatoo Docks and Engineering Company, Sydney | 14 November 1939 | Sold in 1969 | 
| HMAS Kangaroo | Cockatoo Docks and Engineering Company, Sydney | 4 May 1940 | Sold in 1967 | 
| HMAS Karangi | Cockatoo Docks and Engineering Company, Sydney | 16 August 1941 | Sold in 1966 | 
South African Navy
    

HMS Barcross (1943), later renamed SAS Somerset.
| Name | Ship builder | Commissioned | Fate | 
|---|---|---|---|
| SAS Somerset (ex HMS Barcross) | Blythe S.B. Co | 21 January 1943 | Decommissioned 31 March 1986. Museum ship, Cape Town as from 2 September 1988[3] | 
| SAS Fleur (ex HMS Barbrake) | William Simons & Co, Renfrew, Scotland) | 15 February 1943 | Sunk by naval gunfire off Simonstown on 8 October 1965[3] | 
Surviving ships
    
- SAS Somerset is a museum ship in South Africa
 - HMAS Karangi is the only survivor on the RAN fleet in Homebush Bay as an abandoned wreck.
 
Citations
    
- Richard Pelvin with Robert Darby. "Australian War Memorial : Know your warships!" (PDF). www.awm.gov.au. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 April 2008. Retrieved 21 September 2010.
 - Jentschura, Jung, Mickel: Warships of the IJN 1869-1945
 - Du Toit 1992, p. 144.
 
References
    
- http://uboat.net/allies/warships/class.html?ID=326
 - http://uboat.net/allies/warships/class.html?ID=372&navy=HMS
 - Du Toit, Allan (1992). South Africa's Fighting Ships: Past and Present. Rivonia, South Africa: Ashanti Publishing. ISBN 1-874800-50-2.
 
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